Meta Cognition
Meta Cognition
Meta Cognition
Developed by Linda Darling-Hammond, Kim Austin, Melissa Cheung, and Daisy Martin With Contributions From Brigid Barron, Annmarie Palincsar, and Lee Shulman Stanford University School of Education
Learning Objectives
Defining metacognitionTeachers will understand what metacognition is and how it improves learning. They will become familiar with two aspects of metacognition: reflection and self-regulation. Developing metacognitive skillsTeachers will understand what it means to develop a culture of metacognition in the classroom. Teachers will become familiar with strategies for helping students regulate, monitor, and guide their learning.
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We know that children are not initially very accurate or efficient at describing what they know, but as they get older their skills improve, especially if they have been taught and have had practice in how to think about and discuss their own thinking (Brown et al., 1983). Children can be guided to develop an understanding of what they know and do not know. Teachers can also help students develop an appreciation for what learning tasks might demand, as well as an awareness of the particular knowledge and strategies they can bring to these tasks. In Kendra Hearns 12th-grade writing class in this sessions video, for example, students use mind maps to organize their thinking before writing an essay. Ms. Hearns students also articulate their ideas and peer review each others writing before revising their essays. Students can be encouraged to develop a sense of their own knowledge by asking questions such as, What do I know? What dont I know? What do I need to know?Teachers can help students to reflect on what they know and what they want to know as they embark on the study of a new topic. Students can reflect again on what they know as they conclude a lesson or unit. During the course of their work, teachers can encourage a reflective stance toward learning that helps students assess and direct their own emerging understandings. It is not only the teachers job, but also the students responsibility to assess and direct their own learning. By asking students to consider what they might do to learn something they want to knowand then providing a range of resources for them to pursue it (materials, peers, and information)teachers can help students learn how to learn with greater independence. Students can play an increasingly active role in monitoring what they know and dont knowand how they can find out what they need to knowto further their own learning (Mayer & Wittrock, 1996; Schoenfeld, 1987). Students can also be prompted to ask more general questions about a task or problem that help them become aware of their existing resources and needs. Reflective questions can help students become aware of what they can do and make connections to the tasks at hand. A student might reflect on her work and conclude, I understand what I want to say in my essay, but Im having trouble figuring out how to get into it, or I have lots of ideas about ways to test my hypothesis, but I dont know how Ill know if Ive proved or disproved it. Identifying the challenging aspects of complex cognitive tasks can help students narrow down what they need as they seek assistance. Similarly, identifying their own knowledge can help students become a source of assistance for others. This process of being aware of ones own knowledge state is called self-monitoring. Teachers can help their students learn how to ask self-monitoring questions as they are learning. These questions might differ depending on the developmental level of the learner. For very young children, the focus of the question might serve to self-test. For instance, while they are reading a story, young students might be encouraged to ask, Do I know who this character is, what problem he is trying to solve, or the sequence of events in this story? As students enter the middle grades, the nature of the questions increasingly shifts to What inferences can I draw?What is the meaning of this symbol in the story or What is the relevance of this information to a problem that Im trying to solve? High school teachers might encourage their students to evaluate the stand an author is taking: What is the authors perspective? Is the authors evidence sufficient to support the stand that he has taken?
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Learning how to be mindful of ones process and how to think strategically about a task can make problemsolving more efficient. The strategic essay writer knows how to plan his central thesis and supporting points, rather than simply writing thoughts in a stream-of-consciousness, just as the strategic mathematics student is able to step back and consider different approaches to a problem, rather than trying all the possible numbers that might give a correct answer. Such learners are accustomed to monitoring their work as they are working, Am I making my points clear and understandable?Am I getting closer to a solution or farther away? They also look back on their work to evaluate their own success, Have I convinced my reader?Does this solution make sense? Learning how to monitor ones own thinking process can enable the learner to self-correct, rather than always relying on others to be the audience and sounding board for ones work. Teachers can also help students become better at selecting strategies. They can help students ask and answer questions such as How can I keep track of what I know? or How do I decide which paths to go down? and How long should I try this approach?When should I switch to another strategy? or What should I try next? All of these questions help students explore new subject areas, and assist them in transferring what they know from one problem to the next (Bransford et al., 2000). Good metacognitive thinkers are also good intentional learners. That is, they are able to direct their learning in the proper ways to build understanding. They know when to use strategies and how to use them (Bereiter & Scardamalia, 1989). They are able to redirect the normal frustration that occurs when things are confusing or are not initially productive into further learning and research strategies. Teachers can help students become intentional learners by helping them manage uncertainty, redirect their efforts productively, and persevere when they get frustrated. Teachers can do this by modeling and discussing aloud their thinking process when they themselves approach uncertain tasks (I am thinking I could try this approach or that approach. Lets see what happens if I try this one), as well as what they do when they hit a snag or dead end. They can also monitor students as they work to catch them at points when they need encouragement or are becoming frustrated and need a new strategy. The ability to work strategically can be taught and must be learned if students are to succeed at being self-directed learners throughout their lives.
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Classroom activities that call on these metacognitive strategies take many forms and vary depending on the topic. Generally, however, activities like journaling (where students keep a journal in which they reflect on what they understand, what they are learning, and what they do not understand); process reflection (where students reflect on their process of learning, including what worked and what did not work for them); or self-assessment (where students assess their own work against standards or criteria for quality) are all ways of activating metacognitive skills. They all require that students consider their own thinking and how they acquired their knowledge. In Kathleen Hayes-Parvins sixth-grade language arts class in this sessions video, for example, students engage in reciprocal teaching. They teach preservice teachers at the University of Michigan how to create a reading and writing workshop, which uses a number of these strategies. Teaching others helps Ms. Hayes-Parvins students reflect on their own learning process. Teachers can model thinking strategies by reflecting on their own processes as learners. They can make transparent for students the processes they themselves use and can ask students to display and discuss their own learning strategies for the class. For example, by demonstrating on a screen how to examine a microbe under a microscope and by talking aloud about his process, a biology teacher can make visible processes that would not be obvious from observation alone. Similarly, by asking lab teams to brief the class on their processes and findings, students can get access to many different approaches, which can provide different hooks into the material. [See Session 8, Cognitive Apprenticeship.] It is also important for teachers to reflect on their own teaching with their students and with other teachers. Modeling reflective processes such as thinking aloud about strategic decisions (Should we move on to the next topic, or have we not yet fully explored this one?); evaluating ones own work (How well did I structure those groups?); and making underlying thoughts visible (Heres how I thought about grading these papers.) contributes to a climate of going meta on everyday tasks.
Conclusion
Activities that encourage a reflective and strategic stance toward learning should be embedded in the regular activities of a classroom. Too often, such reflective activities are an add-on or afterthought, which takes away from the power of ongoing reflection, evaluation, and revision, and being strategic about our work. When teachers make aspects of learning and problem-solving visible, and help students identify their own strengths and strategies, they can have a lasting impact on how their students learn once they leave their classrooms.
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Session Video
Metacognition is thinking about your own thinking. It is what we do when we manage and monitor our work by asking ourselves questions like, How well am I doing? What do I need to do next? What else do I need to learn in order to achieve my goal? This sessions video features teachers helping their students to learn and practice metacognitive strategies.
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What benefits and challenges do you perceive in using rubrics in the classroom?
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Applications
1. Journal
Why do you think revision and self- and peer assessment encourage student metacognition? Consider when you might use revision and self- and peer assessment in your current teaching context. How might you incorporate them into an upcoming unit? If you already use them, discuss how, and the disadvantages and advantages.
2. Field Assignments
Describe and analyze a learning environment using a concept central to learning theory. Observe a classroom in which students are being taught to use metacognitive strategies. Describe and analyze how students are learning to be metacognitive within that environment. Use the following questions as guides, but feel free to write about other things that you see as relevant and important to this description. How do teachers and/or students make the purposes of learning explicit? What kinds of teacher and student questions support the development of student metacognition? How is the process of learning valued in the classroom as well as the products of learning? What strategies does the teacher use to encourage and support students to think about their own thinking? What kinds of opportunities do participants have to exchange and think about ideas?
What kinds of feedback happen in the classroom? What kinds of opportunities do students have to incorporate feedback into their work and revise it accordingly?
Use specific evidence from your observations to support your description and analysis.
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2. Essay Questions
a. How do the metacognitive skills of expert thinkers in a field differ from those of novices in the same field? Pick a topic/subject with which you are familiar to illustrate how an expert thinker might use metacognitive strategies in ways that a novice learner might not. How can you use your metacognitive skills to monitor and develop your own thinking as teacher? What strategies for reflection and self-regulation might you use to problem-solve and manage dilemmas in your classroom? How will you know if these strategies work? What do you now understand about metacognition? What dont you understand? What would you like to know? How might you learn what youd like to know?
b.
c.
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Notes
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